ATTENTION
Beauty
Starts
Here
MICHIGAN MIRACLE MISSION
ATTENDEES
Shining hair, sparkling eyes
and radiant skin are created
through good nutrition.
In the short time that you have left before
you leave, please let TRAVELERS WORLD
help you review your luggage & travel
accessory needs. At TRAVELERS WORLD
you will find name brand luggage including
Andiamo, Delsey, Hartmann, Lark,
LeSportsac, Lucas, Samsonite, TravelPro &
Tumi. Plus, you will find a' wide assortment
of travel appliances and accessories that pro-
vide comfort and convenience.
But, healthy diets may be
sabotaged by:
S unique metabolic conditions
poor absorption
environmental toxins
• antagonistic food combinations
Call 313-625-6677
Nedra Downing,DO
Nutritional Medicine
To convey our enthusiasm for this
extraordinary historical event, whether you
are traveling with the Mission or not, please
mention this ad and TRAVELERS WORLD
WILL DONATE 10% OF THE VALUE OF
YOUR PURCHASES TO THE ALLIED
JEWISH CAMPAIGN, from now until
April 18, 1993.
MICHIGAN
`11132.11Jd
O rill
Working with you...
to achieve optimum health,
-naturally-
LEVI
WRANGLER
* Get your next pair of
SANSABELT®
MIRACLE
MISSION
slacks at a sensible price
starting at $3999
BAS
Free Tailoring
Sizes 32-60
Come in and see our great
selection of Levi
HANDBAGS
APRIL 18-28,1993
L
6253 ORCHARD LAKE ROAD • NORTH OF MAPLE ROAD
0
In Sugar Tree • West Bloomfield
SHOP MON. thru SAT. 10 to 6:30 • THURS. 10 to 8 • CALL: 855-3180
EG
sr-o,
a
Vti
in sizes 29-54, length to 38
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
Leman Corp./Franklin Construction, Inc.
JOHN R MEN'S WEAR
9 Mile & John R
Congratulate
Detroit Tennis & Squash Club
DESTRUCTION DESIGNED FOR THE BIG
of Farmington Hills
on Completion of its new
Z ORIENTAL RUGS
•
FITNESS CENTER
P
• NO court time charges
• 13 outdoor clay courts, New indoor courts
Squash courts, Private Lessons, Clinics
e Massage Therapy, Personal Fitness Training
Memberships Available 313'661'2300
Slittdn• Pretty
RETIREMENT SALE
LAST 3 WEEKS
EVERYTHING MUST GO
60% - 75% OFF
Patio & Indoor Furniture, Tables, Lamps,
Leather & Formica Furniture
58
Layaways & previous sales excluded Permit #37
Evergreen Plaza 19747 W. 12 Mile, Southfield 552-8850
Hours: M-W 10-6, Thurs. 10-7, Fri. & Sat. 10-6
(take 1-75 to 9 Mile)
open daily 9:30-6:30; Mon. & Fri. 9:30-8:00
Sun. 11-5
543 - 4646
We buy them, sell them,
appraise them, clean them
repair them
and Love them!
In-Home & Office
Carpet Cleaning
(313) 399-2323
co
O
OAK PARK OUTLET •
BIRMINGHAM •
•
ANN ARBOR •
546 RUGS
646 RUGS
973 RUGS
-
-
-
Larry Paul makes
FURNITURE
NEW.
Custom Restoration,
Lacquering,
Refinishing of new
or old furniture,
antiques, office
furniture, pianos. I 61
For Free
Estimates
681.8280
Territories Closure
Leaves Vacancies
Jerusalem (JTA) — "Talk to
me a year from now, and we
shall reach a situation in
which most job vacancies
(formerly held by Palestin-
ians) will be filled by Israeli
workers," Danny Gillerman,
director-general of Israel's
Chambers of Commerce, told
a reporter this week.
Mr. Gillerman spoke as
the Israeli economy tried to
adjust to a ban declared by
Prime Minister Yitzhak
Rabin on allowing Palestin-
ian workers from the ad-
ministered territories to
enter Israel proper.
The closure of the ter-
ritories, announced last
week in an effort to end a
wave of Palestinian attacks
on Israelis, is expected to
last at least until the end of
the Passover holiday.
But many Israelis, such as
Mr. Gillerman, said the
government should severely
limit the number of Palesti
nians working in Israel
proper even after the closure
is lifted and that such a
policy would help curb high
unemployment rates among
Israelis.
Even as the economy and
government struggled to
cope with the loss of the
roughly 120,000 Palestin-
ians who typically make
their way daily into Israel
for jobs, a ministerial com-
mittee, headed by Labor and
Welfare Minister Ora
Namir, was established to
set future limits on Palestin-
ian laborers crossing the
"Green Line" into Israel
proper.
At the weekly Cabinet ses-
sion, the government also
decided to limit the number
of roads leading from the
West Bank to Israel proper,
in an effort to have better
control of those coming to
Israel, and to ban the entry
of private Palestinian cars to
Israel.
Political observers noted
with irony that the govern-
ment, which had tried for
the last two decades to erase
the so-called "Green Line,"
now appeared to be moving
in the opposite direction of
maintaining a firm separa-
tion between the territories
and Israel.
The moves were being seen
by some as glaring evidence
of the country's failure over
the past 26 years to in-
tegrate the territories and
their inhabitants into the
Israeli sphere.
The closure consequently
is being seen by some as car-
rying a political significance
— intended or not — in the
context of negotiations over
the territories' future.
Meanwhile, the govern-
ment and Jewish agencies
mounted a national effort to
solve the immediate crisis of
the labor shortage caused by
the closure.
The Jewish Agency for
Israel and the World Zionist
Organization have so far
recruited 200 replacement
workers following what were
termed "urgent consulta-
tions" at the end of last
week.
The recruiting drive is be-
ing conducted in cooperation
with the Agriculture Min-
istry and the national
Employment Service.
Three thousand more vol-
unteers are slated to start
farm work over the course of
the month as part of the
Jewish Agency-WZO effort.
The workers are being
The government
should limit
Palestinian
workers.
recruited from among high
school juniors and seniors in
Jewish Agency Youth
Aliyah boarding schools and
youth villages, new immi-
grants, and teen-agers from
abroad who are here on
various youth programs.
"One of the main values in
Israeli history is the impor-
tance of Jewish labor," said
WZO spokesman Yehuda
Weinraub, "and WZO has
always stressed this as part
of its philosophy."
The workers will receive
70 shekels or about $25 a
day from the Israeli
government.
Samson Simson, the first
Jewish member of the New
York Bar, was one of the
founders and vice-president
of the Jeffersonian Democrat
Party in 1795. On the other
hand, Joseph and Jessie
Seligman were leading
members of the new Repub-
lican party and were in-
strumental in getting Abra-
ham Lincoln elected in 1860.